Ralph Rose and Martin Sheridan: The Battle of Shepherd’s Bush

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Sultry heat and pelting rain turned the road through the exhibition grounds into “a sea of liquid mud,” marring the 1908 Olympics, according to the The Times of London. A much greater problem, however, was bitter partisanship that had emerged between the United States and Great Britain. The division grew so sharp that the 1908 Games were named “The Battle of Shepherd’s Bush.”

The seeds of animosity were sown from the onset. During the opening ceremonies, the U.S. delegation became indignant when it discovered that the British organizers had not included the Stars and Stripes among the flags decorating the Olympic stadium. The British explanation, that they could not find a U.S. flag, was a little too pat for the Americans, who had a plentiful supply of flags. The Finnish flag was also omitted, because the Finns elected to carry nothing rather than bear the Russian flag.

U.S. flag bearer Ralph Waldo Rose, a giant at 6.5 feet (2 metres) and 275 pounds (125 kg), refused to dip the flag before King Edward VII and thus began an American tradition that survives to this day. Although at the time little was made of Rose’s apparent defiance, it became fodder for legend. Discus thrower Martin Sheridan, an Irish American who needed little prompting to scorn the British, is reported to have made the famous remark “This flag dips to no earthly king.” One tale has it that Rose, Sheridan, and the other weight men of the U.S. team, many of whom were of Irish origin, had concocted the plan to keep the flag aloft while enjoying drinks together on the eve of the opening ceremony.

In competition Rose, a shot-putter, won his second Olympic gold medal with a 46.62-foot (14.21-metre) heave. Sheridan was a top medal winner, taking home two golds—one for a discus throw of 136 feet (41.46 metres)—and a bronze.